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Degrees Conferred on Class of 2018 at Spring Commencement

By Gerianne Wright Downs
May 2018

Afternoon rain showers didn’t dampen the spirits of nearly 1,000 graduate and undergraduate students at SUNY Plattsburgh who have successfully completed their studies and awarded diplomas at the college’s annual spring commencement ceremony May 19 at the Field House.

“No dream you have today will be foreclosed to you because your education here failed you; and that when it is your turn to shoulder the institutions of this world, you will have the capacity and the commitment to do so.”

Dr. James Coffey, professor of accounting, carried the college mace as faculty marshal during the morning ceremony; Richard Mikkelson, SUNY distinguished teaching professor of art, carried the mace in the afternoon. The mace, designed and sculpted in 1985 by the late Dr. Edgar Barton, SUNY distinguished teaching professor of art, is traditionally carried by the most senior members of the faculty. One of the earliest distinctive signs used by medieval university official, a mace was originally a wooden staff carried by royal messengers. Barton used his own unique technique of silver inlay in a piece of black walnut to create a modern adaptation of this tradition.

Moran said it was an honor to be among the recipients of the award, first presented by the College Council in 1966 honoring those who have made a lasting contribution to the college, community, state, nation, and/or to the international community.

He also gave a nod to the faculty and then to the students, of whom he said “are the antidote to the despair that so often assaults us in the world news. I have always found them to be decent, openhearted and genuinely appreciative of the opportunity to cultivate their talents.”

And public education is what enabled that cultivation, he said. The system of public higher education “is an engine of democracy because it prepares citizens from all backgrounds for civic life and leadership. The system of public higher education built on this belief is one of the great achievements of our society.

“You graduates, who are yourselves among its most direct beneficiaries, must keep faith with that achievement,” Moran directed them. “No dream you have today will be foreclosed to you because your education here failed you; and that when it is your turn to shoulder the institutions of this world, you will have the capacity and the commitment to do so.”

Graduates Kyala Clegg of Clayton, N.Y., and Mackenzie Dumas of Shushan, N.Y., were commencement speakers for the morning and afternoon ceremonies, respectively. Clegg, a nutrition major, said she was appreciative that SUNY Plattsburgh “offered me a firm foundation in the nutrition program and allowed me the opportunity to cross disciplines to truly recreate myself in my time here.”

Dumas, a communication studies major, told her fellow graduates to be excited when great things happen, but to “also know that not everything will happen as you were hoping it would,” suggesting they instead “know that you have the strength and ability to push through and move forward.”

After the official tassel change from right to left, led by Student Association President Jessica Falace, Dr. Ashley Gambino ’03 G’05, first vice president of the Plattsburgh Alumni Association, and Marcia Cognetta ’98, member, board of directors, welcomed the newest members into the association at the morning and afternoon proceedings, respectively. The SUNY Plattsburgh Alumni Association now claims Saturday’s graduates among their ranks of more than 63,000.